Wow, that just felt like a really long weekend. I guess that's because I actually took all three days "off". Actually spent time, you know, not working; played with my boat, hung out with friends, watched the Tour, went sailing, BBQed with my family, and sat by the pool reading. (Julian Comstock via Kindle, if you must know, so far, so great.) I pay for it starting tomorrow with a couple of busy weeks sandwiching the Death Ride next Saturday, whew. But in the meantime...

I haven't mentioned for a little while, but I continue to enjoy Winding Road, an online-only car magazine. In the latest issue they not only review the best Aston ever (a subject near and dear to my heart :), they also test drive the Tesla Roadster and compare it to a Lotus Elite. (Verdict: Wow.) A great read, especially considering the price ($0).

Meanwhile Chris Anderson says Tech is too cheap to meter. Well maybe. Reading Julian Comstock (which takes place in a future that resembles the 1900s due to the end of abundant oil), the combination of a recession and peak oil is not cause for celebration. I think Chris might be trying too hard (per the Law of Significance).

So new browsers like Firefox 3.5 support the <video> tag from HTML5, which means in theory they could play video without any support from plug-ins or "local" codecs. Great, so which codec do they support? Well... here we run afoul of the various patents which encumber any usable codec. And here we have another exhibit in a long list of cases where patents do not spur innovation, and do not help technology move forward. Remember: copyrights=good, patents=bad. Got it?

Have you ever known someone who was a lightning rod for anything bad that could happen? Well my friend Mark is like that, and recently he caught quite a bolt; check out this article in the LATimes about how he was saddled with a $10,000 phony phone bill from Verizon. It ended well but Whew.